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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> KCR v The Scout Association [2016] EWHC 587 (QB) (18 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/587.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 587 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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KCR |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SCOUT ASSOCIATION |
Defendant |
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Mr A Weitzman QC (instructed by BLM Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 25, 26 February and 1 March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge McKenna :
Introduction
The Abuse
(a) Grooming and manipulating the claimant;
(b) Requiring the claimant to view pornography;
(c) Fondling the claimant's leg;
(d) Kissing the claimant;
(e) Fondling the claimant's genitals under his clothing;
(f) Requiring the claimant to undress;
(g) Requiring the claimant to wear sexually inappropriate clothing;
(h) Requiring the claimant to assume sexually explicit poses;
(i) Photographing and video recording the claimant during the abuse;
(j) Masturbating the claimant;
(k) Performing oral sex upon the claimant;
(l) Digitally penetrating the claimant's anus;
(m) Penetrating the claimant's anus with his tongue;
(n) Engaging in frottage with the claimant (thrusting his penis between the claimant's buttocks;
(o) Ejaculating on the claimant's anus;
(p) Requiring the claimant to masturbate Hopkins;
(q) Requiring the claimant to perform oral sex upon Hopkins;
(r) Ejaculating in the claimant's mouth;
(s) Abusing other children in the claimant's presence;
(t) Requiring the claimant to engage in sexual activity with other children.
"After the abuse would take us downtown to buy toys, sweets, chocolate; if we said we wanted something we got it. That's when we realised that we had a power over him. We'd got so used to what he was doing to us, we just shut ourselves off to get what we wanted. I would see THREE to FOUR times a week for four/five years. and Me were his favourites and we planned to bleed him dry, we were kids who wanted all those things we couldn't afford, so we were going to get them, but we were not going to be abused any more. We were never going to be able to say no that didn't happen, we couldn't change anything, so we used it to our advantage. knew that, he knew that the only way to keep us quiet was to get us those things. would take a few of us on days out to Zoo and Park. I may have been 11 years old then when we went, Me, and . Nothing would have happened when we were out on the trip, but probably when we got back and before going home. The abuse got less and less as we headed to secondary school, and were too old for I don't know when it stopped, it didn't feel right; didn't add up and I realised this shouldn't be happening. That is when I broke free ."
The Claimant's Life to Date
The Parties' Respective Cases
The Law
"23. It is and must be accepted that at least in cases of assault and similar torts, it is appropriate to compensate for injury to feelings including the indignity, mental suffering, humiliation or distress that might be caused by such an attack, as well as anger or indignation arising from the circumstances of the attack. It is also now clearly accepted that aggravated damages are in essence compensatory in cases of assault. Therefore we consider that a court should not characterise the award of damages for injury to feelings, including any indignity, mental suffering, distress, humiliation or anger and indignation that might be caused by such an attack, as aggravated damages; a court should bring that element of compensatory damages for injured feelings into account as part of the general damages awarded. It is, we consider, no longer appropriate to characterise the award for the damages for injury to feelings as aggravated damages, except possibly in a wholly exceptional case.
24. Where there is an assault, the victim will be entitled to be compensated for any injury to his or her feelings, including the anger and indignation aroused. Those feelings may well also be affected by the malicious or spiteful nature of the attack or the motive of the assailant; if so, then the victim must be properly compensated for that, particularly where the injured feelings have been heightened by the motive or spiteful nature of the attack. In our view, damages which provide such compensation should be characterised and awarded therefore as ordinary general damages which they truly are. The misapprehension as to the nature of the damages to be awarded for injured feelings which plainly arose in the trial judge's mind and which led him to award a sum that was wholly extravagant as aggravated damages would not have arisen, if the award had been made as one of ordinary compensatory general damages and not as an award of aggravated damages. The facts of this case clearly did not in any way approach the wholly exceptional case where an award of aggravated damages might still be appropriate."
I approach the assessment of general damages with that guidance very much in mind.
"I must therefore examine a wider version of the rule, which was applied by Flaux J. This has the support of the reasoning of the Court of Appeal in Clunis's case [1998] QB 978 as well as other authorities. It differs from the narrower version in at least two respects: first, it cannot, as it seems to me, be justified on the grounds of inconsistency in the same way as the narrower rule. Instead, the wider rule has to be justified on the ground that it is offensive to public notions of the fair distribution of resources that a claimant should be compensated (usually out of public funds) for the consequences of his own criminal conduct. Secondly, the wider rule may raise problems of causation which cannot arise in connection with the narrower rule. The sentence of the court is plainly a consequence of the criminality for which the claimant was responsible. But other forms of damage may give rise to questions about whether they can properly be said to have been caused by his criminal conduct."
Factual Evidence as to causation
Discussion and Findings of Fact
Frequency and Exact Nature of the Abuse
"Because of the abuse, I never had a chance to have a proper childhood or the chance to grow up normally. The only thing I had growing up was Hopkins and his abuse. I felt that I did not fit in anywhere, not with my family and I had no friends.
I did not even get the chance to dream about what I wanted out of life. I do not know what shape my life would have taken had it not been for the abuse. I feel like I have nothing and no future to look forward to. Hopkins has taken away my life and what he did to me at such an early age set the path for the rest of my life. My life has never been the same since the abuse.
I want to be able to draw a line under it all and get the medical help I need. I cannot live another 30 or 40 years like this. I have lost my childhood, teenage years and adult years all because of Hopkins. I know some of the decisions have been my own decisions but I should never have been put on this path. My moral compass was ruined from a very early age and thereafter I had limited choices."
Education
Drug Use
Relationships
Employment
Therapy
Psychiatric Evidence
Assessment of damages damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity
"(A) Psychiatric damage generally
The factors to be taken into account in valuing claims of this nature are as follows:
(i) The injured person's ability to cope with life and work;
(ii) The effect on the injured person's relationships with family, friends and those with whom her or she comes into contact;
(iii) The extent to which treatment will be a success;
(iv) Future vulnerability;
(v) Prognosis;
(vi) Whether medical help has been sought;
(vii) Claims relating to sexual and physical abuse usually include a significant aspect of psychiatric or psychological damage. The brackets discussed in this chapter provide a useful starting point in the assessment of general damages in such cases. It should not be forgotten, however, that this aspect of the injury is likely to form only part of the injury for which damages will be awarded. Many cases include physical and sexual abuse and injury. Others have an element of false imprisonment. The fact of an abuse of trust is relevant to the award of damages. A further feature, which distinguishes these cases from most involving psychiatric damage, is that there may have been a long period during which the effects of the abuse were undiagnosed, untreated, unrecognised or even denied. Aggravated damages may be appropriate.
(a) Severe
In these cases the injured person will have marked problems with respect of factors (i) (iv) above and the prognosis will be very poor. £41,675 to £88,000 with the ten per cent uplift £45,840 to £96,800."
The Compensation argument
Concluding remarks